The idea that the act of being a player can change the game. Answers are given based on what the interviewer wants to hear. Refer to observer inseperability. It is […]
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HELD
Something kept in custody or storage to satisfy a condition.
HELD COVERED
1. insurance term for a rule acceptance of insurance risk as long as extended cover exists. 2. AKA direct covered.
HELD IN TRUST
term used to describe property held by a person who is not the owner but who is a trustee or an agent.
HELD ORDER
An option that is transferred into stock fast.
HELD-TO-MATURITY SECURITIES
An investment held on to until its retirement date.
HELL
The name formerly given to a place under the exchequer chamber, where theking’s debtors were confined. Rich. Diet
HELL OR HIGH WATER CLAUSE
A rule in a contract a party to perform it part even if the other is not.
HELM
Thatch or straw; a covering for the head in war; a coat of arms bearing acrest; the tiller or handle of the rudder of a ship.
HELOWE-WALL
The end-wall covering and defending the rest of the building.Paroch. Antiq. 573
HELP DESK
A call center to give user assistance on computer related issues. Individuals with a background walk a user through a process. A single product can have many help lines.
HELP WANTED ADVERTISING
An ad in the paper an employer places to find a new employee. It shows the job vacancies and economic growth.
HELP-WANTED INDEX (HWI)
A list of areas a business is seeking a party to work for them.
HELPER APPLICATION
A program that is added to the interent to make it work better.
HELSING
A Saxon brass coin, of the value of a half-penny
HEMATOPOIETIC
A chemical agent that decreases oxygen in blood causing death.
HEMIPLEGIA
In medical jurisprudence . Unilateral paralysis; paralysis of one side ofthe body, commonly due to a lesion in the brain, but sometimes originating from tliespinal cord, as in “Brown-Sequard’s paralysis,” […]
HEMOLDBORH, or HELMELBORCH
A title to possession. The admission of thisold Norse term into the laws of the Conqueror is difficult to be accounted for; it is notfound in any Anglo-Saxon law extant. […]
HEMORRHAGE
A big loss of blood in a short time. It is also spelled as haemorrhage.
HENCEFORTH
A word of futurity, which, as employed in legal documents, statutes,and the like, always imports a continuity of action or condition from the present timeforward, but excludes all the past. […]
HENCHMAN
A page; an attendant; a herald. See Barnes v. State, 88 Md. 347, 41 Atl. 781.
HENEDPENNY
A customary payment of money instead of hens at Christmas; acomposition for eggs. Cowell.
HENFARE
A fine for flight on account of murder. Domesday Book.
HENGHEN
In Saxon law. A prison, a gaol, or house of correction .
HENGWYTE
Sax. In old English law . An acquittance from a fine for hanging a thief. Fleta, lib. 1, c. 47,